Living in Oz

Living in Oz is the sixth studio album released by rock musician Rick Springfield by RCA Records in 1983. The album was quickly certified Platinum in America.

Living in Oz
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 1983
GenreRock
Length39:19
LabelRCA Records
ProducerBill Drescher
Rick Springfield chronology
Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet
(1982)
Living in Oz
(1983)
Hard to Hold
(1984)
Singles from Living in Oz
  1. "Affair of the Heart"
    Released: April 1983
  2. "Human Touch"
    Released: July 1983
  3. "Souls"
    Released: October 1983
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Rolling Stone[2]

In 1984, Springfield was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance for the "Affair of the Heart" single, which peaked at number nine on the Billboard Hot 100 and #10 on the Cash Box Top 100.

The album's title is an allusion to living in Australia (Oz = Australia).

Track listing

All songs written by Rick Springfield, except "Affair of the Heart", co-written with Danny Tate and Blaise Tosti.

  1. "Human Touch" -5:08
  2. "Alyson" -3:49
  3. "Affair of the Heart" -4:33
  4. "Living in Oz" -3:49
  5. "Me & Johnny" -4:26
  6. "Motel Eyes" -3:12
  7. "Tiger by the Tail" -3:25
  8. "Souls" -4:15
  9. "I Can't Stop Hurting You" -3:44
  10. "Like Father, Like Son" -2:57

Personnel

  • Rick Springfield - lead vocals, guitar, bass, backing vocals
  • Tim Pierce - guitar
  • Mike Seifrit, Dennis Belfield - bass
  • Brett Tuggle, Alan Pasqua, Gabriel Katona, John Philip Shenale, Mitchell Froom - keyboards
  • Mike Baird - drums
  • Jack White - electronic drums
  • Richard Elliot - saxophone solo on "Human Touch"
  • Michael Fisher - percussion
  • Richard Page, Tom Kelly - backing vocals
  • String arrangements on "Like Father, Like Son": Tom Scott (also the conductor), Rick Springfield, John Philip Shenale
  • Engineered by Bill Drescher at Sound City
  • Mastered by Greg Fulginiti at Artisan Sound Recorders

[3]

Notes


gollark: You can easily treat a product as a service by dividing up the purchase price/expected maintenance cost over the lifespan.
gollark: [REDACTED]
gollark: And?
gollark: If I can get a tablet from a bag or whatever (only the small ones are particularly pocketable, and they then lose any advantage they might have had), I can also probably get out a laptop, which is generally better.
gollark: I have a tablet for convoluted reasons, but it gets absolutely no use because a phone and laptop cover all the things I might want it for.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.